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The Humans Crashing Into Driverless Cars are Exposing a Key Flaw (bloomberg.com)

schwit1 sends in a story from Bloomberg pointing out that the rigid adherence to traffic laws and overcautious programming have caused self-driving cars to rack up a crash rate twice that of an average human driver. "This may sound like the right way to program a robot to drive a car, but good luck trying to merge onto a chaotic, jam-packed highway with traffic flying along well above the speed limit. It tends not to work out well. As the accidents have piled up — all minor scrape-ups for now — the arguments among programmers at places like Google and Carnegie Mellon University are heating up: Should they teach the cars how to commit infractions from time to time to stay out of trouble?" While the autonomous vehicles aren't at fault in these crashes, their relative unpredictability on the road are nonetheless leading to more accidents than expected.

22 of 748 comments (clear)

  1. Unison by Tukz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I have always thought that for automated vehicles to be a reality, ALL traffic has to be automated.
    It takes almost an A.I. to be able to adjust to the random nature of human driving.

    --
    - Don't do what I do, it's probably not healthy nor safe. -
    1. Re: Unison by Xest · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That's true anyway though. Speed limits are typically set not to completely prevent fatalities, but to minimise them.

      Speed limits in the UK around pedestrianised areas are set at 30mph not because that means you're guaranteed to be able to stop if a kid runs out in front of you, but because at that speed there's a very high chance that such a collision will not be fatal (whereas at 40mph it would pretty much always be fatal).

      Getting driverless cars to adhere to the limit doesn't seem like a particularly big deal - they don't need to slow down to avoid all collisions altogether, just enough to almost certainly prevent fatalities - that's always going to be way better than now where human reaction times are such that they can't react to drop speed as fast as a computer.

      There is no moral dilemma because existing standards are sufficient, we've already made these decisions, computers needn't be treated specially. It's like saying if 5 people jump out in front of a car now, should you swerve into a wall and kill yourself, or should you kill them? Sorry but if they jump in front of a car that's travelling legally without giving it time to stop then that's on them - in this case the driver is the only innocent, because they're the one that hasn't acted in a profoundly stupid manner and so does simply not deserve to die, whereas the other 5 people were basically choosing an action equivalent to suicide.

      Even if you come up with some convoluted theory such as "What if the people are being blown across the road by a hurricane and have no choice" there's no real argument, because you're legally supposed to drive in a manner safe enough for the weather conditions, not simply the speed limit - any driverless car programmed to follow the rules of the road will know this and will be travelling slowly and safely enough in hurricane conditions for this to not be an issue.

      We already have automated trains, and if you jump out onto the track in front of them without them having chance to stop we call it what it is - suicide.

      Driverless cars only really introduce questions of liability and responsibility for people who don't know that those liability and responsibility questions are already well answered in existing law. All you have to do is substitute "What should the computer do?" with "What should the driver do?" and you already have your answer enshrined and well tested in existing law.

    2. Re: Unison by Cederic · · Score: 3, Insightful

      As for children playing dare across the road - it'd be good to stop if you see them, but if not there's also a little thing called natural selection that's been really underrated lately.

      So your cars are programmed to kill stupid people? Good to know. Does that extend to pedestrians peering at their mobile phone and blind people too, or just children?

      I am curious though. How does the car know the child is stupidly playing Dare and not merely still going through the 'Learning roads are dangerous' phase? Or are all children fair game?

      I guess it'll help with overpopulation.

  2. Human drivers are terrible by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm sure there will be AI defenders who will question the assertion about a crash rate "double" that of average humans. But it doesn't matter. The point is that human drivers are idiots and drive in all sorts of unpredictable ways. They also tend to hate other drivers who operate in demonstrably safer ways (e.g., allowing plenty of space in front of them, not accelerating wildly just to stop 100 feet ahead in stop-and-go traffic, not zooming past a slower lane in a merge situation, but instead attempting a "zipper merge" at the same speed as the slower lane, etc). Of course, a lot of the less safe human behaviors also tend to be the reason for traffic snarls in the first place, but you'll have a hard time convincing most drivers of that, since they want to drive as if they are on a racetrack and somehow think that weaving back and forth to get into that tiny gap you've left in front for safety is going to allow them to get home so much faster (even if it's only 2 seconds earlier).

    I imagine the biggest problem with having AI cars obey traffic laws strictly is not the accidents -- rather that it's going to lead to human road rage, which often leads humans to be even more irrational and drive in even less safe ways. Thus, while AI cars are still a minority on the roads, I'm not sure it will lead to a net improvement in accident statistics -- just as a "slow driver" on a highway can block up traffic, cause other drivers to drive unsafely around them, and ultimately lead to the potential for more accidents, even if that slow driver thinks they are being "safe" by driving the speed limit or a little below.

    1. Re:Human drivers are terrible by BasilBrush · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Or... it's simply a learning curve. For both AI and human drivers.

      Besides, all of the robot crashes have been minor fender benders. It may be worth living with double the rate of those if the serious crashes that injure people are perhaps halved.

    2. Re:Human drivers are terrible by PvtVoid · · Score: 4, Insightful

      All of this is true, yet accident rate of these idiotic humans is half of what rigidly-abiding robots are.

      No. The accident rate of the idiot humans is twice as high with robot cars as it is with other idiot humans.

    3. Re:Human drivers are terrible by sinij · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Besides, all of the robot crashes have been minor fender benders. It may be worth living with double the rate of those if the serious crashes that injure people are perhaps halved.

      Bingo. The relevant question is "What is the crash rate involving injury?"

      Not quite. The relevant question is "What is the crash rate involving injury for a desired level of traffic throughput.

      If all we wanted to do is reduce injury, we could enforce 10 mph speed limit with automatic speed traps and draconian fines and completely eliminate any kind of traffic-related injury.

  3. No. Human or machine, it's a fallacy by edtice1559 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This is nothing more than a sophisticated from of "everybody else is doing it" argument that you get from small children. If the rules aren't working, the solution is to either enforce the rules better or to change the rules. Having everybody ignore the rules and not change them is the worst possible outcome. It creates a situation where things simply can't get better. Nobody can know the real effect of properly enforced rules so there's no data that can be used for improvement of the rules. What we need is better enforcement for human drivers. It's almost inexcusable that neither cars (nor trains) have automatic speed control systems that prevent exceeding the limit. Invariably somebody will point out the fantastical corner case where accelerating and swerving makes sense but those can be easily solved.

  4. Re:the new slow dummies in the left lane by TheCastro1689 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So...everyone? The issue here is that people tend to drive as fast or as slow as the road allows, normally it's the common law speed limit. Humans can usually adjust to this, robots with strict rules can't.

  5. Re:the new slow dummies in the left lane by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Which is a great theory, but the reality is that if the speed limit is set very low on a road for no apparent reason then a lot of drivers won't respect it, and unless you can and will enforce that limit strongly and consistently, that is unlikely to change. Putting the remaining drivers -- those who do want to be responsible and safe -- in a position where they have to choose between breaking the law and driving as safely as possible, is bad law-making.

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    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
  6. Accident type is relevant by PvtVoid · · Score: 5, Insightful

    From TFA: "They’re usually hit from behind in slow-speed crashes".

    If this is in fact the dominant accident mode, I would suggest that this is not such a big deal and will, over the long term, be self-correcting as the insurance rates for idiot non-automated drivers shoot up because they can't get it through their thick skulls not to tailgate other vehicles.

    1. Re:Accident type is relevant by starless · · Score: 3, Insightful

      From TFA: "They’re usually hit from behind in slow-speed crashes".

      If this is in fact the dominant accident mode, I would suggest that this is not such a big deal and will, over the long term, be self-correcting as the insurance rates for idiot non-automated drivers shoot up because they can't get it through their thick skulls not to tailgate other vehicles.

      So, what's happening that makes tailgaters hit the driverless cars more often than driven cars?
      Are the google cars suddenly slamming on the brakes in a way that humans don't generally do?

  7. Re:the new slow dummies in the left lane by bulled · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Which is a great theory, but the reality is that if the speed limit is set very low on a road for no apparent reason

    Oh there is a reason, it just has nothing to do with safety.

  8. Re:the new slow dummies in the left lane by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So...everyone? The issue here is that people tend to drive as fast or as slow as the road allows, normally it's the common law speed limit. Humans can usually adjust to this, robots with strict rules can't.

    That is incorrect. People tend to drive as fast or as slow as enforcement of the speed limit allows. If authorities start enforcing the speed limit, the speed driven will decrease. Since there is no real penalty to speeding, people speed.

  9. Re:the new slow dummies in the left lane by Stephan+Schulz · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Which is a great theory, but the reality is that if the speed limit is set very low on a road for no apparent reason

    Oh there is a reason, it just has nothing to do with safety.

    Or there is a reason, it has to do with safety, or with optimising throughput, or some other valid concern, but that reason is not obvious to every dummy driver on the street. I don't trust every guy who owns a pair of pliers and a power drill to have a go at my dental care. So why would I assume that I know better than the experts which speed limits are optimal for a given set of goals?

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    Stephan

  10. Re:the new slow dummies in the left lane by Gadget_Guy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Oh there is a reason, it just has nothing to do with safety

    Surely this article shows that the speed limit is indeed about safety. If you think that you actually driving at a safe speed and then run into a car that is travelling at the legal limit then obviously you were driving too fast to be able to avoid a hazard on the road. If you travelled slower then you would have more of a chance to see the car, correctly gauge it's speed, and then stop before you ran into it.

  11. Re:Adaptation by matbury · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Agreed. Human drivers tend to have this sense of entitlement and exceptionalism so that they believe that they can break the law but anyone else who does it is a dangerous idiot. Automated cars are a new type of vehicle that these drivers have to negotiate. Expect a learning curve with a spike in accidents while drivers get used to it. I remember the same thing happening in Barcelona when they re-introduced trams. There was a sudden, dramatic spike in accidents, some of them fatal, while drivers learned what they could and couldn't "get away with." The answer is to give time for lawless drivers to learn about automated cars and adjust their law-breaking appropriately so that they don't get involved in as many accidents. And while we're at it, how about automated cars recording everything that happens around them that can be presented as evidence in court?

  12. Re:Not an Infraction by Voyager529 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    There isn't any situation I can think of where speeding up will end up saving lives

    Getting out of the way. In most cases, a car can accelerate out of the way of a car faster than its brakes can overcome intertia. Even if it can't, I'd much rather an accident where I get T-boned in the trunk than in one of the doors.

    nor is that why cars can go faster than posted speed limits

    Well, a car that maxed out at 55mph would be laughable in other states where 65 and 75 are common. trying to decide upon a national speed limit would be ridiculous, as it doesn't account for population density or geography/topography. Sure, this argues well for having cars max out at 90, rather than 120 or 140 (higher in some of the high end / exotic models), but a car that maxed out at 75 would be more desirable than one that maxes out at 55, and then we end up with interstate commerce hell...

    nor does anybody teach swerving into the left hand (on-coming) lane to avoid an accident.

    This particular lesson was covered as follows: "do whatever the hell it takes to avoid an accident". If that includes swerving into the left lane? so be it. Here's a for-instance: residential area, two lane road, a driver isn't looking too closely while backing out of the driveway. Do you retain your lane, or swerve into the left lane to avoid hitting his car in the rear wheel well area? Same for hitting a deer, fallen tree, road construction, idiot texting instead of looking at the road, a situation where the lights aren't synchronized and thus the left side is clear and the person in front of you stopped short...

    That's just beyond brain dead

    No, assuming that we're only talking about driving in a straight line on a highway, as if it is the only possible scenario where driving skills come into play, is beyond brain dead.

    "let me trade this rear end collision with a head on collision, all day long!".

    I am certain that the GP wasn't referring to crossing the divider when there was oncoming traffic. To more fully phrase it with the included context, his/her statement was this: "At present, Google cars treat the divider line as sacrosanct, and will not cross it under any circumstances. However, there are edge cases when driving where the best way of avoiding an an accident is to cross the line. Humans know that avoiding an accident is more important than staying in the lane; most humans would look at another human sideways if an accident took place because the driver adhered to lane markers rather than self preservation. This is expected of humans, but not of Google cars."

  13. How is this a flaw with the cars? by bistromath007 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It sounds more like a flaw with traffic laws.

  14. Re:Not an Infraction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    In >99% of such situations, the correct decision is to hit the brake, NOT the accelerator.

    Dear God, no. No, no, no. You're that guy that slams on his brake at the end of an on ramp because he can't process the situation quickly enough to know when it's appropriate and *preferred* to hit the damn gas pedal and merge at speed rather than stop in the middle of the lane and wait until that steady stream of traffic lets up. Here's a clue for you and zillion other ass hats out there...it's not letting up and your over cautious bull shit just put everyone behind you in a worse situation than they would have been if you were never born to begin with because then they would have just accelerated up to speed and merged in little a normal person rather than sitting in a line waiting to for someone to either slam into the back of them or at the very least greatly increasing their risk of getting into an accident when it's finally their turn and they have to come up to 70 mph from 0 mph in about 100 feet. Thanks.

  15. Re:Adaptation by Immerman · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If you're not paying attention to the driver in front of you, then you're distracted. If you''re not leaving enough room to stop if the driver in front of you brakes, then you're driving recklessly. Neither is to be condoned.

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    --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
  16. Re: the new slow dummies in the left lane by thegarbz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's people who don't understand that simple rule that cause accidents

    People who don't understand that the overtaking lane is also not an excuse for speeding nor does it have a requirement that you do 30km/h above the limit is also what causes accidents. In general idiots who think they own the road in every which way cause accidents.

    I get that about once a week. Overtaking some speed limited truck takes about 10-15 seconds when I'm driving the limit. Some idiot will come up behind me at a stupid speed and start flashing his lights and honking the horn. They are just as bad as those people who block the lanes for no reason.